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Unreported News, Commentary, Resources and Discussion of Bible Prophecy
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1whowaits wrote:so you are saying that the AC does not exalt himself over Allah because the AC is Allah? The scripture directly states that the AC exalts himself over every other god, so if he does not exalt himself over Allah then he must be Allah in your view, is that correct? The view of the Islamists is that the Mahdi is a man, a servant of Allah, not Allah himself.
1whowaits wrote:But if Gog-Magog and armageddon are separate events, if Gog and the AC are separate individuals, if the AC is not muslim, then the timing of the muslim involvement would be different. If the above were the case, then the muslims would dominate and be active prior to the 70th week or at the beginning of the 70th week, with something else following their defeat... So i am not attempting to diminsh the 'Islamic paradigm' view, i am attempting to determine the timing of it
1whowaits wrote:my point is that scripture which describes the actions of the AC do not fit Islam perfectly, in fact in several places it is contrary to Islam. Dan 11 and 2 Thess both state that the AC will set himself over all gods and all that is called god, that is not consistent with Islam.
1whowaits wrote:And if the god of forces is Allah, the scripture states that the god of forces is unknown to the AC
1whowaits wrote:If the hordes of Islam, led by a supposed Mahdi, attacked Israel and God destroyed those armies in front of the world and all knew that God had rescued Israel, things would change overnight.
1whowaits wrote:Islamists would never again attack Israel, they would know that God had intervened on Israel's behalf and they would not want to anger Him again.
1whowaits wrote:The world would likely turn against Islam as they attacked Israel and brought destruction on the rest of the world
1whowaits wrote:and Israel would be held in high regard as God blesses Israel.
1whowaits wrote:And many 'christians' could believe that the muslim attack was indeed armageddon, the events could look like scripture had been fulfilled. But there would be no return of Jesus, no rapture, no millenial kingdom, and many could turn away from the faith....
1whowaits wrote:And if the scripture's description of the acts of the AC do not fit Islam exactly, we should consider the possibility that all is not as it appears
1whowaits wrote:Mitchell, as far as Dan 11:38, it does appear to be inconsistent with the AC being of Islam. The 'god of forces' is unknown to the fathers of the AC and the AC conquers with the help of the god of forces, a 'foreign' (alien or strange)god to the AC.
1whowaits wrote:Acording to Islamic writings the Mahdi is a muslim from a muslim family. If the AC is a muslim from a muslim family, how is it that the god he honors is a 'foreign or alien' god to him(not Allah) and how is it that the god the AC honors is unknown to his forefathers (again not Allah)? Not consistent with Islam.
1whowaits wrote:As far as the AC setting himself over all gods, you have not indicated how a muslim could do this and remain a muslim (and not get killed). The scripture states that the AC sets himself over all gods, which would include Allah, when he states this in front of the muslim hordes, he will be killed. If in your view Satan is Allah and Satan possesses the AC and carries our his desires through the AC, the AC would state before the muslims that he was over all gods, except Allah (Satan), because he was Allah (Satan), and the muslims would promptly kill him... There is no plausible scenario in which a muslim sets himself over all gods and remains a muslim (and alive).
1whowaits wrote:Also in Dan 11, the AC says unheard of things against the God of Abraham, the God of gods. Rev 13 further indicates that the AC blasphemes God, and slanders His name and His dwelling place and those who live in heaven. While the muslims claim that the God of Abraham is their god, they do not intentionally slander the name of God or heaven or the angels.
1whowaits wrote:In Dan 11, the AC attacks an conquers several muslim nations, the majority of which are Sunni. The Sunni comprise 80-90% of the muslim population, the Shia 10-20%, and all believe in the Mahdi. If the AC were the Mahdi, how is it that 90% of Islam rejects him and he must conquer them? And he conquers them with the remaining 10%? How does he then have the resources to conquer Israel? And he conquers them with the remaining 10%? How does he then have the resources to conquer Israel?
1whowaits wrote:What is described of the AC in Dan 11 is not consistent with Islam.
1whowaits wrote:it is interesting that you quote Dan 11:38 but you appear to forget the verse that follows- 'He will attack the mightiest of fortresses with the help of a foreign god...' In the context of Dan 11:39, the 'foreign god' is mentioned in relation to the one he helps, the AC. In this text the god is foreign to the AC, the god of forces is not only unknown to the fathers of the AC, he is also foreign to the AC himself.
1whowaits wrote:And your explanation of how muslims 'blaspheme' of God, while we may consider it blaspheme, is not consistent with what the AC does in the Rev text of slandering God, heaven and the angels, and the Dan 11 text of the AC 'saying unheard of things' against the God of Abraham.
1whowaits wrote:Your view is of religious differences and their implications, the scripture refers to direct slandering and blaspheming of the God of Abraham, which a muslim would not do.
1whowaits wrote:And you do appear to miss the point that, while the Mahdi may lay some claim to divinity, the AC in Dan 11 states that he is over all divinity, he is over all gods and all that is called god. The AC is 'over' all other gods, including Allah, he is not equal, he is not the servant of Allah as the Mahdi is stated to be, he is over all gods, which is not consistent with Islam. The AC stating that he is 'over' all gods would rule out the possibility that the AC is a muslim.
1whowaits wrote:In Dan 11 the AC attacks Egypt, Lybia and Sudan and conquers them, muslim nations that are majority Sunni. Your explanation for this was that this could be a sunni/shia conflict, but the sunnis are the majority, if the AC is attacking sunni nations then 90% of the muslims must reject him. But the likely explanation is that the AC is attacking muslim nations because he is not a muslim.
1whowaits wrote:considering that the AC is a muslim view has many holes in it
1whowaits wrote:as does the view that Gog and the AC are the same individual
1whowaits wrote:one might consider the implications of what could follow the Gog-Magog event occurring at an earlier time, which i was attempting to do above... This is speculation
1whowaits wrote:but it might be worth considering alternative scenarios regarding the timing of the 'muslim paradigm' as the 'AC is muslim' theory has significant weaknesses.
In the 99 names of Allah in the Qur'an, "Saviour" is not one of them. But in the Bible, YHWH declares in Isaiah 43:11 that “I am the Lord, and apart from me there is no savior.”

Exit40 wrote:Rev 13:17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
I am wondering, what is the Arabic word for savior. As it is not a name of allah in the koran and it is the name the mahdi or AC will use, it must be the name of a man, the number of which is 666. Your thoughts ?
1whowaits wrote:From your statements, you believe the Mahdi /AC does not directly indicate that he is god, rather that because the Mahdi claims to be the savior of the world you can then infer that this qualifies as claiming to be god. But the basis of your arguement is an inference made by you, this is not stated in scripture.
Scripture does not state that the AC indicates that he is a savior or that he is subtle about his claims, the scripture states that the AC speaks 'boastfully' (Dan 7) and he claims to be god-'he sets himself up in God's temple, proclaiming himself to be God.' 2 Thess 2.
1whowaits wrote:The AC is stated to speak boastfully as is given a mouth to utter proud words, not a depiction of someone who is subtle and does not declare exactly what the scripture states about him. And not only that, Dan 11 and 2 Thess state that the AC exalts himself over all gods and all that is worshipped and called god, much more than an inference.
1whowaits wrote:Your view appears to be based on what the Islamists state about the Mahdi, not what scripture states about the AC.
1whowaits wrote:And the scripture indicates that the AC exalts himself over all gods and proclaims himself to be god, and he indicates this directly, he is not subtle about it. Your claim that the AC does not state that he is God is not supported by scripture, one who speaks boastfully in a temple proclaiming himself to be God is what the scripture indicates. And if an Islamic Mahdi states that he is God, or exalts himself over all gods, he is no longer a muslim.
1whowaits wrote:Mitchell, actually Jesus did make statements indicating that He was God- 'Before Abraham was, I am' is a direct statement indicating His divinity, 'I am' is God. Also Jesus asked Peter who do you say that I am, and Peter replied that He was the Christ, the Son of the living God, and Jesus affirmed his statement. In mark 14 a priest asked Jesus whether he was the Christ, the Son of the Blessed One, and Jesus said 'I am', and 'You will see the Son of Man siting on the right hand of the Mighty One..' In Luke 22 Jesus was asked if He was the Son of God, He stated 'You are right in saying that I am.'
1whowaits wrote:If the AC follows His example then he would do the same, which is part of your arguement, but contrary to your point. The Mahdi saying that he is the savior of the world is not necessarily a claim to being God as you suggest
1whowaits wrote:one can claim to save the world from its problems without indicating one is God and offering eternal salvation.
1whowaits wrote:Does the mahdi say that he is his god, Allah?
1whowaits wrote:Does the Mahdi himself offer eternal life?
1whowaits wrote:2 Thess 2 states that the AC shows or displays himself as God, he does not do this in secret, he does this before men ...
1whowaits wrote:If the AC does not speak the words as you suggest, which strains credulity, does displaying oneself as God in a temple get the message across?
1whowaits wrote:If the AC speaks boastfully and exalts himself over all gods, is it reasonable to assume that he does this in secret? Is sitting in a temple displaying oneself as God imply a secretive, nonverbal act?
1whowaits wrote:And the only chioce that you can think of, that the AC claims to be the savior of mankind, where is that directly stated in scripture? Then this is only an assumption on your part, your view here is built on an assumption, correct?
1whowaits wrote:IMO, a reasonable person reading the straightforward statements of Dan 11 and 2 Thess 2 would not make the assumptions that you have, the AC displaying himself as God and exalting himself over all gods does not imply or suggest that one is calling oneself the savior of mankind and thereby covertly calling oneself god.
1whowaits wrote:IMO, the starting text would then appear to be the writings of Islam, and not the scripture, it appears that one would have to ignore the straightforward reading of scritpure, and 'adjust' the scripture to fit the writings of Islam regarding the Mahdi.
Mat 26:63 But Jesus did not answer. So the high priest said, "With the living God looking on, you must tell the truth. Tell us, are you the Messiah, the Son of God?"
Mat 26:64 "That is what you say!" Jesus answered. "But I tell all of you, 'Soon you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right side of God All-Powerful and coming on the clouds of heaven.' "
Mat 26:65 The high priest then tore his robe and said, "This man claims to be God! We don't need any more witnesses! You have heard what he said.
1whowaits wrote:where in scripture does it state that the AC presents himself as the savior of mankind?
1whowaits wrote:the Mahdi/AC says he is the savior, but the claim to being god is based on what God says about being the savior, so the AC would only be recognzed as claiming to be God by those read the scriptures of God.
1whowaits wrote:scripture does not say that the AC claims to be savior anywhere, this not what the Bible states, it is what Islam states about the Mahdi. So it would appear that in your view, one must begin with what Islam indicates about the Mahdi, and then one must speculate on how the scripture fits the picture presented by Islam. This is not deduction from scripture, this is speculation on how the scripture could be made to fit what Islam says.
1whowaits wrote:What scripture indicates in Dan 11 and 2 Thess 2 is that the AC directly presents himself as god, over all gods, there is no subtle inference that he is god, the AC presents it directly.
1whowaits wrote:Scripture states nothing about being the AC claiming to be savior of mankind, you are adding this to fit the Islamic view.
1whowaits wrote:No reasonable person would arrive at your deduction/speculation about Dan 11 by reading only Dan 11. One would first have to read Islamic texts, make the presuppostion that the AC is the Mahdi, and the come up with a view that reconciled the two, no matter how unlikely and convoluted it appeared.
1whowaits wrote:IMO, you are interpreting/speculating about scritpture by referring to a religious extra-Biblical source, one likely written by Satan himself, and then interpretating the scripture through the prism of Islam so that the views of Islam and the scripture appear to be the same.
1whowaits wrote:It does appear that you approach the discussion with your own presuppostions about Islam and scripture, and much of what you are presenting is speculation, speculation which begins with the Islamic view.
1whowaits wrote:Jesus did directly state that He was God, the Son of God is God by definition.
1whowaits wrote:Jesus made direct statements, He said that He was God, He did not imply that He was God, I AM is the name of God, and the Jews understood that He was claiming to be God, that is why they attempted to stone him.
ready1 wrote:Jesus was crucified because he claimed divinity. The high priest understood very well what His claim was.
1whowaits wrote:It appears that you are attempting to promote the view that Jesus was 'passive' about indicating that He was God, only inferring it, by referring to a title Jesus was being subtle about who He was, in your view. It appears that you indicate this to promote your view that the AC does not directly claim that he is God, he infers it by claiming to be the savior of mankind, which you claim is similar to the actions of Jesus. But Jesus was not subtle or coy, He stated that He was God by direct statements, and Dan 11 indicates that the AC is not subtle or coy, he directly indicates that he exalts himself over all gods and is god.
1whowaits wrote:And if the AC directly indicates that he is over all gods, and presents himself as God, he would not be of Islam, if he was the Muslims would kill him.
good4u1 wrote:I must admit, Mitchell, I have enjoyed reading your posts in this thread so very much. You make the case brilliantly for the Islamic paradigm from Scripture and your writing style is so clear and focused. Thank you so much for joining us and yes, I do read your blog spot as regularly as I read Joel's Trumpet!

Mitchell wrote:1whowaits wrote:And if the AC directly indicates that he is over all gods, and presents himself as God, he would not be of Islam, if he was the Muslims would kill him.
This has already been addressed multiple times. I'd encourage you to re-read through the discussion to digest this further.
Blessings!
mark s wrote:How is it that the Muslims will not reject a man who presents himself as God? Will the people think that Allah has come as a man?
1whowaits wrote:It appears that in your view the Mahdi/AC cannot indicate to the muslims in any way that is is claiming to be god, only the christians can figure it out because of a statement that he could make that is not in scripture. So in your view, when 2 Thess 2 states that the AC will exalt himself over everything that is called god or is worshipped, sets himself up in God's temple displaying himself as God, you believe the muslims don't get that, they are blind to what the scripture describes?
And when Dan 11 states that the AC will exalt himself above every god, he does not do that before the muslims, only the christians and Jews?
So in essence your view is that 2 Thess 2 and Dan 11 only applies to christians and Jews? The muslims do not see what Dan 11 and 2 Thess 2 clearly state?
1whowaits wrote:And do you believe that Jesus stating that He was the Son of God is the same declaration as the scriptures calling Adam the son of God? You believe that Jesus was not claiming divinity, or that Adam was divine?
1whowaits wrote:when Jesus stated in Matt 27 that 'you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One...', was He claiming divinity?
1whowaits wrote:And when Jesus was asked 'Are you the Son of God?' and he replied 'you are right in saying that I am' in Luke 22, was He claiming divinity, even though there was no qualification used by the Jews for the term 'Son of God'? Did the Jews consider the 'Son of God' term to be the same as that used for Adam? Or were they referring to divinity?
.....but He did not tell them "I am God."

Abiding in His Word wrote:.....but He did not tell them "I am God."
Isn't Jesus saying that here:
John 14:7 "If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also; from now on you know Him, and have seen Him."
John 14:8 Philip *said to Him, "Lord, show us the Father, and it is enough for us."
John 14:9 Jesus *said to him, "Have I been so long with you, and yet you have not come to know Me, Philip? He who has seen Me has seen the Father; how can you say, 'Show us the Father'?
John 14:10 "Do you not believe that I am in the Father, and the Father is in Me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on My own initiative, but the Father abiding in Me does His works.
John 14:11 "Believe Me that I am in the Father and the Father is in Me; otherwise believe because of the works themselves.
Mitchell wrote:Abiding in His Word wrote:.....but He did not tell them "I am God."
Isn't Jesus saying that here:
John 14:7 "If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also; from now on you know Him, and have seen Him."
John 14:8 Philip *said to Him, "Lord, show us the Father, and it is enough for us."
John 14:9 Jesus *said to him, "Have I been so long with you, and yet you have not come to know Me, Philip? He who has seen Me has seen the Father; how can you say, 'Show us the Father'?
John 14:10 "Do you not believe that I am in the Father, and the Father is in Me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on My own initiative, but the Father abiding in Me does His works.
John 14:11 "Believe Me that I am in the Father and the Father is in Me; otherwise believe because of the works themselves.
Yep. Without saying, "I am God." Also see Matthew 9:2. John 11:43-44. Luke 8:54. He demonstrated that He was God, without having to say, "I am God."
Mitchell wrote:good4u and Exit40, thank you, I have been blessed and encouraged by your kind words.mark s wrote:How is it that the Muslims will not reject a man who presents himself as God? Will the people think that Allah has come as a man?
Hi Mark, in short, it is my position that according to Scripture Antichrist does not overtly declare "I am God", but rather shows ("apodeiknymi" -- "to declare" or "exhibit" or "show" or "demonstrate") himself as God by bestowing upon himself the "divine title" as it were of humanity's "Savior." In the eyes of Muslims, claiming to be the "savior of humanity" is not a declaration of Divinity. According to YHWH, however, this is a definitive declaration of Divinity, for God Himself states unequivocally in Isaiah 43:11 that “I am the Lord, and apart from me there is no savior.” Indeed, “…I am God, and there is none like Me” (Isaiah 46:9). When the Islamic Antichrist therefore pronounces himself as "Savior" whom all must follow, Jews and Christians will recognize this immediately as a direct affront to the faith of Abraham, while the Islamic world -- rejecting the Bible -- will embrace it, for it is already set up into believing Antichrist's lie with arms wide open:
* The Awaited Savior of Humanity (al-Mahdi in the Eyes of the Ahlul Bayt) (http://tinyurl.com/ctnfgxh)
* The Twelfth Imam, the Savior of Humanity (http://tinyurl.com/d2m6qvz)
* The Saviour Trailer (Imam Al-Mahdi) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fCPBya6CFM)
* The Awaited Saviour Imam al-Mahdi (http://tinyurl.com/bqeva8z)
* Waiting for Islam's Messiah (http://www.cbn.com/CBNnews/411301.aspx)
I'd encourage you to take about 30 minutes to read through the full thread. It's a bit long, but in the end I think it'll give you a pretty good overview of my position, including my view of Gog of Magog.
mark s wrote:That helps to clarify. Essentially, you are saying that in the eyes of the Muslim's he won't be declaring or demonstrating he is God, so no problem with them. But in the eyes of the Jews and Christians, he will be implying that he is God, so they will reject him.
mark s wrote:Concerning Gog/Magog and Armageddon, there are passages the I think should be understood as meaning what they say in their plain sense, which require that these be completely separate events, and separated by 7 years.
But if the AC is a muslim mahdi, he cannot claim to be god or exalt himself over all gods, if he did the muslims would reject him and kill him. So the AC would then have to lie to the muslims and deceive them about who he really claimed to be, he would not actively claim to be god, he would have to actively deny that he was god to the muslims (although the christians could figure it out).
Meaning two things, that since humans are mere reflections of God there can be no distinction ore separation between the two and without God the creatures would be non- existent.[15] When an individual understand that there is no separation between human and God they begin on the path of ultimate oneness. The one who decides to walk in this oneness pursues the true reality and responds to God’s longing to be known.[15] The search within for this Reality of oneness causes one to be reunited with God, as well as, improve self-consciousness.
The Perfect Human trough this developed self-consciousness and self-realization prompts divine self-manifestation.[15] This causes the Perfect Human to be of both divine and earthly origin, al-Arabi calls him the Isthmus. Being the Isthmus between heaven and Earth the perfect human fulfills God’s desire to be known and God’s presence can be realized through him by others.[15] Additionally through self manifestation one acquires divine knowledge, which is the primordial spirit of Muhammad and all its perfection.[15] Al- Arabi details that the perfect human is of the cosmos to the divine and conveys the divine spirit to the cosmos.[15]
He serves as the ultimate pole between the divine and the physical world.[15] The Qutb knowledge is not taught via prophet but rather directly from the divine.[15]



mark s wrote:How is it then that the Muslims would worship the beast, and even the image of the beast, if they do not think of him as God?
Do they normally worship men?
Thank you!
Mark

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